Ranger awarded highest National Park Service honor

Lisa Hendy, 2011 Harry Yount National Park Ranger Award winner | Photo courtesy of National Park Service
Lisa Hendy, 2011 Harry Yount Award winner | Photo courtesy of National Park Service

GRAND CANYON, Ariz. –Grand Canyon National Park Supervisory Park Ranger Lisa Hendy was awarded the National Park Service’s 2011 Harry Yount National Park Ranger Award on Oct. 26.  The award is for excellence in the field of rangering and is named after the nation’s first park ranger (hired in Yellowstone National Park in 1880). It is the highest honor that can be bestowed on a park ranger today.

“Each year, we ask those rangers who tackle the toughest assignments, protecting park resources and the nearly 300 million people who visit our national parks annually, to single out one among them that epitomizes the ranger ethic,” said NPS Director Jon Jarvis. “We give that person the Harry Yount Award.”

According to the award nomination submitted by Grand Canyon’s Chief Ranger, Bill Wright, Hendy has earned it. “Ranger Hendy is one of those rangers that can be sent to any call…. [She] is one of that rare breed … that simply excel[s] at every aspect of rangering.”

Wright said that on any given day, Hendy could be found rappelling over the edge to stabilize a patient, working with the park’s Special Response Team to do a building sweep, responding with the structural fire engine to a burning RV, providing advanced life support care as a paramedic, being short-hauled into a victim on the river, or patrolling the backcountry – checking permits, stirring toilets, assessing archeological sites – and the list goes on.

Hendy said that hers is “…a career built on the wisdom and teachings of (other) rangers….” Speaking of the lessons she had learned from supervisors and rangers she has worked with over the years, she said, “I estimate that it has taken at least 50 rangers to build the ranger you have standing before you today. That means for every ranger like me, there are at least 50 of them out there.” It was clear that Hendy felt honored and privileged to have worked with each and every one of them.

“We couldn’t be more pleased that Lisa was selected for this prestigious award,” said the Park’s Superintendent, Dave Uberuaga. “The Harry Yount Award and rangers like Lisa Hendy represent the very best in the ranger service. They give us all something to strive for. I congratulate Lisa on setting the bar particularly high.”

Hendy was born in Chattanooga, Tenn., and attended Auburn University. Over the years, she has worked in Yosemite, Rocky Mountain, Arches and Yellowstone National Parks. In 2004, she accepted a position as a law enforcement ranger in Grand Canyon National Park’s Canyon District where she still works today.

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